ChurchOfIreland
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Refuge. Exile. Return.

A quiet reflection on finding God in dialysis chairs, disrupted routines, and the sacred margins of life. When the world feels too loud, this is a space to breathe. Continue reading
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Joy. Reverence. Presence.

On St Malachy’s Day, three scriptures whisper a quiet call: walk with joy, speak with reverence, feed with love. A reflection shaped by silence, rhythm, and the sacred art of tending souls. Continue reading
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Hidden. Held. Honoured.

When the crowd expects polish, mercy climbs a tree. This week’s reflection traces the quiet courage of being seen—coat on, note folded, presence enough. Continue reading
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Brightness. Silence. Cloak.

A quiet reflection for All Saints’ Day—where Wisdom walks with those who eat alone, where silence is not exile but grace, and where the cloak is never forgotten. Continue reading
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Fearful. Wonderful. Faithful.
Psalm 139 opens with a breathtaking truth: we are fully known by God. Not just in our strengths, but in our complexity. For those who experience the world through neurodivergence, this psalm is a balm. It tells us that every thought, every pattern, every moment of overwhelm or brilliance is seen and understood. God does… Continue reading
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Candle. Rhythm. Mercy.

A morning reflection on readiness, quiet encouragement, and the grace of rising together when the signal comes. The readings for this morning—Psalm 111, 1 Maccabees 7:1–20, and John 13:21–30—carry a strange tension. Praise and betrayal. Courage and compromise. A candlelit room where someone slips out into the dark. And yet, the psalmist begins with a… Continue reading
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Stillness. Choosing. Staying.

On trustworthy leadership, gentle correction, and the rhythm of shared care. Today’s readings and Rule offer a quiet choreography of discernment, dignity, and shared responsibility. In Psalm 116, we hear the voice of one who has survived—not only physical danger, but the slow erosion of trust and belonging. The psalmist’s vow to walk in the… Continue reading
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Kneel. Hold. Heal.

Reverence in the Presence of Shared Grace “Sing a new song to the Lord, for he has done marvellous things.” — Psalm 98:1 Today’s rhythm begins with a trumpet blast of praise and ends in the quiet dignity of communal rising. Psalm 98 invites us to rejoice in the Lord’s victory—not our own cleverness or… Continue reading
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Rain. Silence. Mercy.

When silence becomes praise and mercy meets the rain-soaked soil, even the overlooked find their place in the liturgy of being seen. This week’s reflection honours the quiet dignity of showing up—without performance, without apology. Continue reading
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Rededicate. Rejoice. Repeat.

Lighting the lamp in a quiet chapel, this reflection weaves Psalmody, rededication, and resurrection into a rhythm of presence—where constraint becomes sacred, and the Psalter still glows with quiet light. Continue reading
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Darkness. Tending. Awe.

Three women. One tomb. A psalm that ends in darkness—and a silence that trembles with the hint of resurrection. Continue reading
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Call. Rhythm. Witness.

Reflection for the Feast of St James, Brother of the Lord Psalm 119:145–168 | Jeremiah 11:18–23 | Matthew 10:16–22 | RB 18 Today’s readings and rhythm feel stitched together like the quilt on the chapel chair—each square distinct, yet part of a whole. Psalm 119, in its final stretch, is a cry of constancy: “I… Continue reading
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Lamp, Camp, Cross.

Rhythms of Presence in Prayer, Preparation, and Witness Psalm 119:105–128 | 1 Maccabees 3:42–60 | Mark 15:33–41 | RB Chapter 18 There are days when the lectionary and the Rule seem to conspire gently, offering not answers but a rhythm to inhabit. October 22 is one such day. The psalmist speaks of a lamp, not… Continue reading
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Rhythm, Mercy, Presence.

Praying the Hours in Dialysis and Grace Psalm 89:1-18 | 1 Maccabees 3:27-41 | Mark 15:16-32 | RB Chapter 17: Today’s readings are not gentle. Psalm 89 begins with promise—“I will sing of your steadfast love, O Lord”—but quickly turns to lament. The psalmist remembers covenant and kindness, yet feels the sting of abandonment. Maccabees… Continue reading
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When the Word Stands Alone

Is the Word enough? A reflection on Scripture, Tradition, and Reason—and the danger of standing alone. #NeuroDivine Continue reading
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Rhythm, Resistance, Surrender

A reflection on praise in constraint, courage in quiet, and the strength of showing up. Psalm 80 | 1 Maccabees 3:1-26 | Mark 15:1-15 | RB Chapter 16: There’s a thread running through today’s readings that feels stitched into the fabric of my days: the ache of longing, the courage to resist, and the quiet… Continue reading
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Stitched into Silence

A quiet joy threads through covenant, rhythm, and persistence—where Alleluia waits, justice lingers, and presence becomes its own prayer. Continue reading
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Let Them Come

Children aren’t distractions—they’re divine disruptions. Let them come, wiggle, wonder, worship. Church isn’t tidy—it’s alive with grace. Continue reading
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Scandal. Covenant. Mercy.

In the wilderness of illness and betrayal, we hold fast to the rhythm of prayer. This reflection weaves Psalm 55’s anguish, Maccabean fidelity, and Mark’s scandal with the quiet insistence of the Rule: that even in pain, we forgive—and are forgiven. Continue reading
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When the Chalice Cracks

A cracked chalice symbolizes sorrow and division within the Anglican Communion, yet grace still pours through the fracture with hope. Continue reading
